Paul Sacher

Paul Sacher,
(born April 28, 1906, Basel, Switz.—died May 26, 1999, Basel), Swiss conductor, businessman, and patron of the arts who , catalyzed 20th-century music by using his immense wealth to commission some 200 compositions. He studied conducting with Felix Weingartner and was trained as a musicologist by Karl Nef at the University of Basel. In 1926 he founded the Basel Chamber Orchestra, and in 1933 he established the Schola Cantorum Basiliensis, an institute for the study of pre-Romantic music. One of his most important commissions was Bela Bartok’s Music for Strings, Percussion, and Celesta, which had its world premiere in 1937. In 1934 he married Maja Stehlin, a widow whose first husband, Emanuel Hoffmann, had inherited shares in the Hoffmann-La Roche pharmaceutical empire. Through the marriage Sacher became a member of the board of Hoffmann-La Roche, and after World War II he captured a majority stake in the firm, an act that made him one of the wealthiest men in the world. He became conductor of the newly formed Collegium Musicum Zürich in 1941, and he led it for more than 50 years. He commissioned such notable works as Richard Strauss’s Metamorphosen (1945), Igor Stravinsky’s Concerto in D (1946) and A Sermon, a Narrative, and a Prayer (1961), and Harrison Birtwistle’s Endless Parade (1987). By the mid-1990s he had amassed a personal fortune estimated at more than $13 billion. To carry on his interests, he established the Paul Sacher Foundation, which purchased the Stravinsky estate in 1983 and held one of the world’s major collections of classical and modern music. In 1996, the year of his retirement, he helped set up the Museum Jean Tinguely in Basel.